
This lecture is a brief introduction to the course and what you'll be learning. In this course I'll be using the VirtualEcho simulator, which you can download at the link supplied in the resources section. You can also use this discount code: VEUDEMY to get 20% off the full version.
In this lecture you'll learn the basic anatomy of the heart, it's chambers, and the great vessels and how they related to each others and to the torso.
In this lecture you'll learn the three types of TTE probe movement: sliding (translation), tilt (angulation), and rotation, and how they affect the view.
In this lecture you will learn how to get the left parasternal long-axis view, the first view in a standard echocardiographic study, and you will learn what structures you see in this view.
In this lecture you will learn how to get the various parasternal short-axis views, and what structures you see in each one.
In this lecture you will learn how to get the apical four-chamber view and which structures it shows.
In this lecture you will learn how to get the apical five-chamber view and the difference between it and the four-chamber view.
In this lecture you will learn how to get the apical two-chamber view and why it's important for a complete echocardiographic study.
In this lecture you will learn how to get the apical three-chamber view and which structures it shows.
In this lecture you will learn how to get the subcostal view and why it's important.
In this lecture you will learn how to get the suprasternal view and why it's sometimes an indispensable view.
Congratulations! You finished the course! You've only just begun learning however, and in this lecture we make sure you know what you need to do next by offering you a curated list of useful echocardiography resources, courses, apps, and textbooks.
This is a course for the absolute beginner who wants to learn what the basic echocardiography views are, how to get them, and which structures can be seen in each view. This is for young cardiolgists or sonographers who are starting out, or for established anaesthesiologists, intensivists or ER physicians who want to learn a life-saving new skill. It's not for established echocardiographers.